The Ludwig Conspiracy

The Ludwig Conspiracy by Oliver Pötzsch Read Free Book Online

Book: The Ludwig Conspiracy by Oliver Pötzsch Read Free Book Online
Authors: Oliver Pötzsch
the door. Then she took off her dark glasses for the first time. The green scarf had slipped back, revealing a sternly pinned-up chignon. Steven put her age at somewhere in her late twenties.
    She really does look like Audrey Hepburn,
he thought.
Or Eva Marie Saint in
North by Northwest.
Only I’m no Cary Grant.
    “Get in. I’ll take you to my place. You’ll be safe there.” The stranger’s eyes twinkled at Steven. “Don’t worry, I don’t bite. Unlike those guys behind us.”
    “Only if you promise to tell me what all this is about,” Steven said breathlessly.
    “I promise. But first we’ve got to get out of here.”
    He could still hear the furious hammering on the door in the backyard. Audrey Hepburn slammed the car door, turned the ignition key, and stepped on the gas.
    Steven had had no idea how fast you could drive a Mini Cooper.

 
     
4
     
     
    T HEY RACED ACROSS A busy square, past a couple of fruit and snack stalls, and then, accompanied by loud honking, turned right onto the Mittlerer Ring. Audrey Hepburn overtook a silver Audi and then stepped on the gas so suddenly that Steven was briefly pressed back in his seat.
    This is all a bad dream,
he thought.
Just a bad dream. I’ll wake up in my bed any second now, with a few volumes of poetry and a book by Gabriel García Márquez beside me. I’ll brush my teeth, go into my shop . . .
    “Are they following us?”
    The voice of the brunette stranger beside him brought him back to reality.
    “What?” he asked, dazed. Only now did he realize that the bag with the little treasure chest in it was on his lap.
    “I asked if they’re following us. Those guys in the black Chrysler.”
    Steven turned around and looked through the rear window at the traffic behind them. Now, at about seven in the evening, a lot of people were on their way home from work, so the streets were crowded. He didn’t see a Chrysler among the mass of cars blinking their indicators, pulling into and out of traffic.
    “I think we’ve shaken them off.” The bookseller looked straight ahead again, until finally he began to feel unwell.
    “Right. We’ll go back to my place, and then . . .”
    “And then nothing. It’s about time you finally dropped all this mystery,” Steven interrupted. “Just tell me straight out what’s going on here. Or I’m getting out of the car right now and taking the bag with me, understand?”
    “What, doing ninety on the Mittlerer Ring?Okay, have fun.”
    Steven sighed. Once again he noticed the touch of a Berlin accent in the woman’s voice, sounding rather unusual here in Munich, the capital of Bavaria.
    “Look, seriously,” he said, emphatically calm now. “Don’t you think we’re a little too old for this childishness?”
    “You may be. I’m not.” The stranger switched down into third gear to get past some lights just as they turned red. “But you’re right. Too much blood has been spilled to call it childish.”
    “Blood? What do you . . . ?”
    Without slowing down, she reached into the glove compartment and brought out a crumpled newspaper, which she handed to Steven without comment. He saw that it was the day’s evening edition.
    “Take a look at page twelve. The story at the top of the page.”
    Steven leafed through the paper until he found the place she meant. His pulse instantly sped up. In the middle of the page of newsprint, he saw the slightly blurred picture of a man he knew. It was the likable old man with the gray bundle, who had come to his shop yesterday. A screaming headline in bold twenty-point type leaped out at him.
     
    HORRIFIC DEATH IN THE FOREST
University professor tortured and murdered
Police face a mystery
     
    Steven swiftly skimmed the report, which emphasized the sensational aspects. Its vigorous phrasing told him that sixty-seven-year-old Professor Paul Liebermann of Jena University had died a horrific death. He had been found the previous evening in a forestedarea just outside Munich with

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